• Flax@feddit.uk
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    4 days ago

    In the UK you have to put a £1 coin in to unlock it. Whenever you return the trolley back, it gives you the coin back

  • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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    10 days ago

    If you scatter carts in random places the supermarket has to employ someone to collect them. So you are a job creatorTM. This is why I never return my cart, and also why I jump on cartons of milk in the dairy aisle and take a dump in the broccoli.

    • RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      People who actually think this are using it as an excuse for their bad manners.

      The person employed by the supermarket to gather carts is not employed to return your cart to the cart return near your vehicle. They are employed to gather the carts from the cart return near your vehicle and bring them back to the store building’s cart return.

      By doing this, you do not create more jobs (as the cart return employee position already exists whether you return your cart or not), you create more work for an already probably underpaid employee and you also increase everyone’s autoinsurance because when the wind blows the carts damage other people’s vehicles.

  • SSJMarx@lemm.ee
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    10 days ago

    I’m a fan of the Capitalist Realist Shopping Cart Theory, myself.

    Putting shopping carts away is bad for society and you should stop doing it.

    The reason is that putting a shopping cart away requires labor, labor requires a person to do it, and the person who has to do it is employed by the grocery store.

    Thus, if enough people refuse to put their shopping carts back, enough excess labor will be generated at grocery stores around the country that they will be forced to hire more people to do it, creating jobs.

    QED

    • meep_launcher@lemm.ee
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      10 days ago

      So my personal take on shopping cart theory is that it assumes putting away shopping carts is not a fun job.

      I have worked at whole foods for 2 years, and the thing I hated the most was how it felt like Bezos’s watchful eye was always on you. The supervisors could be super persnickety about your breaks. Compared to my new life as a self employed musician, it was like prison, but that’s retail for ya.

      I personally loved cart duty. It was a time when I could go outside, get some fresh air, and not be under the surveillance of that god awful company*.

      So now if it is a nice day out, I will go out of my way to put the cart in left field. I call it a chaotic good move.

      That said the “it keeps jobs” is BS. If cart duty wasn’t a thing, the person would still be filling baskets and cleaning windows.

      *Note: the Halstead location in Chicago was actually really great. Maybe it was the Stockholm syndrome of working retail during pandemic, maybe it was Midwestern kindness, but that team actually seemed to care about each other’s wellbeing and we’d even hang out. I lean towards Midwestern kindness though, I moved here from Seattle and while I miss the mountains, I CERTAINLY do not miss the social scene. Despite what the news tries to tell you, Chicago takes care of its own. Even when I was a stranger in a strange land, and then homeless during polar vortex, the people took me in. Every. Night.

      Not sure if I’d visit, but I’d definitely live here.

      Sorry for the Chicago tangent, I’m a few handshakes deep and I get emotional about this fuckin’ place.

  • CptEnder@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    You return your cart because it’s the right thing to do

    I return my cart because it gives me a sense of superiority

    We are not the same